
Airline
Hundreds
 of intending domestic air passengers heading for different various 
destinations to celebrate the Easter were on Thursday stranded at the 
Murtala Muhammed Airport, Lagos and other airports across the country 
following massive flight delays by airlines.
Passengers travelling to Enugu from 
Lagos as well as other South-East and South-South cities had their 
flights delayed by three to five hours, airport officials said.
Investigations by our correspondent 
revealed that the delay was caused by a major technical hitch to the 
passenger checking system of a major domestic operator at the General 
Aviation Terminal of the Lagos airport during the early hours of the 
day.
The development, it was gathered, 
affected several of the airline’s scheduled flights throughout the day 
as the remaining flights were delayed by three hours on the average as a
 result.
A top official of the Federal Airports 
Authority of Nigeria at the GAT said, “The airline’s server was bad in 
the morning. This affected the passenger checking-in system. The server 
did not pick up until three hours later. In fact, the airline officials 
were already issuing boarding passes through the manual method before 
the server picked up three hours later.
“The delay in the morning affected every
 other flight throughout the day. Lagos to Enugu, Enugu to Abuja and 
other flights were affected by the delay.”
Further findings revealed that other 
intending passengers who came to buy tickets for the day were forced to 
postpone their flights till the next day.
The PUNCH had reported 
exclusively reported that the Easter holidays would be marred by 
scarcity of flights as a result of the suspension of flight operations 
by Aerocontractors Airlines because of an industrial action by its 
workers.
The flight scarcity on Thursday led to a
 situation whereby passengers were struggling to get seats aboard the 
few available flights.
Airport touts, in connivance with 
airline officials, were having a field day as a result of the 
development, raising fares astronomically for desperate travellers, who 
were only interested in getting to their destinations.
It was gathered that the ticket for a 
one-hour flight was sold for N40,000 at the GAT instead of the average 
price of between N28,000 and N30,000.
The situation was the same at some other
 airports where a one-hour flight to places like Abuja and Port Harcourt
 was selling for over N40,000.
A visit to the GAT of the Lagos airport 
showed that one of the leading airlines actually capitalised on the 
increasing demand to hike its fares.
The suspension of operations by 
Aerocontractors, the second largest domestic airline by passenger 
traffic, due to internal labour crises, had left the airline grounded 
for almost two weeks.
The airline’s management is battling its
 almost 1,300 employees who are protesting against alleged poor 
condition of service among other issues.
The development has had an adverse 
effect on domestic air travel, which is dominated by Arik Air and Aero 
in terms of large route network.
Passengers have been facing hard times 
getting seats on the South-South and South-East routes operated by only 
Aero and Arik. Destinations on these routes are Benin, Calabar, Uyo, 
Owerri and Enugu.
Other domestic carriers such as Dana 
Air, IRS Airlines, Medview Airlines and Chanchagi Airlines operate from 
Lagos to Abuja and a few cities in the North.
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